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The Clinton News-Record, 1909-11-25, Page 3N9votnbor 25th, 1909 Clint.* Nem -Record C".2. 3 The Time to Locate Bad Roads. This is the time of the eau for 10 - Ming bad roads. A road that meet be laIrlY Passible in atwitter will pre- sent difficulties at this season that make the journey of the 11 avalel:a. very trying one indeed. This is tile testing time, the time when the weak spots come to the top, or the heavily loaded wagon goes to the "bottom," It ehould be somebody's businues to go over the roads and pick oat • these weak spots. lf they cannot be 11Xed uP now then a uote shoald Ir. made of them and the fixing or ss de - let, d until a more convenient seas-. ou. But what is everybody's business nobody's business and the up -shot of the whole matter is that when the (bad wether season passes by and the ' ;roads become tolerably good again, as lull roads have a way .of doing in. dry (weather, nothing is done to -fix up dt.,, •fects. Fall and spring follow - each I other regularly, showing up. the weak (spots, no repairine is done between I.seasons and the roads continue in aa almost impassable slate tliiaiiie the wet fall months or' the breaking up 'season in the spring. Every niunici- rality or county responsible, should make it somebody's business, tie go over the roads et this F•eason, 1 out the bad spots and have. -them in repair as Soon as possible. - Market Gardens in France Often Yield $1,500 an Acre. 11 we should live by gardening we f Old gardens ...dating from Louis. must study the ways a gardening, Philippe's time and before have 41 - who used to say tO his sone, "Put low brick walls with heated ,flues to the horse to, and let us drive round, force winter fruit . on trees trained ee and see what other people are after. !against them. A border two and a The French market gardeners about ' halt feet wide along these walls will Paris are the most skilful gi'ewers ' yield more fruit of the finest quality in the world -except the Chinerr.e-and than we commonly take _from half an the averagegarden of an arc tr IA0 acre of orchard. In winter leant() or --tilled to the eyebrows," a, le.ey Ispan-roof ehelters• of glazed sash pro - say, show the following i eturns, giv- I tect the black Hamburg and. chase - ii bo our consuls and business men in- i 49 grapes, or the peaches, rel and terested in the matter, Iperfunied, which weigh ten ounces "There are, of course, exceptions, I aPieee. By May these glass houses a, e n be taken down and the trees, Test where the total income from'oae :ere 1 .and grow strong in. the open air all is $6,000 a year, but as a usual thilig I the gardens yield but $.; 0500 in the lsummer. acre, and the average annual profit of j FOUR TO SEVEN CROPS. • ' the gardeaer is not over a thousand -dollars." . 1. The skilled -French or -13elgiam gar- Ilow many ministers aad c( liege dener takes four to. seven mops in a professors and, teachers and sriali season from, the same dead rith will. ehoekeepers, artists and 1; tesaly l'clk :There is no magic in it. The mareach- are there. making a healthy living awl i or, or marsh gardener; turns over the putting a thousand dollars a ....ear in .old mushroom beds Of the scaeoa 13-, the bank besides ? i fore, forks them o up toughly ed ' that PARIS' MARKET GARDENS. . I the air works among the .elorls freely The common French gardener make to carry oft the acrid Aso of .deconi- this by extensive gardening. True, .he position, "to sweeten the rod," .as ohe begins with certain -advantages, For isaYs- • In a. few days . it ' grows pow.d- generations before him his 'family have cry, and is beateraany rat.ed to a been gardeners and he has the instinct . level, anti three to eineincli e .0f,,fine for the best methods in the blood.. Lead,not. too flee, are -sifted' river it. Within a ten -mile circuit of Paris are to make the 'seed lic(1. . . • . i 2,000 market gardens, models of care I The radish. seed, :turnips or carrots and culture, some of which have been of the small; tended, quick -growing held by the same families for 2001 sorts are thinly sown ' and preesed years. These gardens are not large ; gently hito. the earth.. On thisslime the largest is said to be not more bed 25 lettuce ;tants' .with leaves the than four acres, common gardens are size of a half dollar are set out, -very- not more than two acres, and not the likely with four or five catilifloWers. smallest profits are taken from plots !under the same glass, •In • the • 'rich, of a quarter acre, tilled with the fin- warm soil,, with plenty of water,. the est care. . , . plants - have nothing.to do but .. to Their very name, the maria,s gar- grow .as fast as Possible .and. . get out dens, comes from - the marias or of each other's wee, In -succeseion. marshes of the .Seine, which were The radishes are- fit to . pull in- three drained four generations ago to get at their rich black soil. 'These plots are tucked away in angles of the old fortifications, are backed by the. city walls, which protect them front the • weeks, the turnips and carrots in five to six weeks, lettuce being head - Then a Ci cat a fortnight before. Then C 11 , Hypnotic .POWen. •Its Use Etnd Abuse. A few days ago in t New Jersey town a proftssional: hypnotist threw a subject intoa trance, and performed the familiar feat of walking till his rigid body, supported at the extreme - ties by two chairs. fie was unable to awaken the victim, however, who died without regaining consciousness. An amateur hypnotist thereupon under- took to bring the dead to life, by` "suggesting heart action," but he made nothing of: it, and an autopsy revealed the fact that an aorto had been Optured. This is by no means the gest death due to hypnotic per- formances. Bernheini reports a man of 37 who Was hypnotised in order to have an inflamed leg treated. Almost immediately he began to breathe hea- vily, and died in two hours, declaring that hypnotism had killed hira. There is a ease on record of a physician who hynoptised his wife to treat a tooth. He, made a few passes; she shrieked and dropped dead. There was no trace of heart disease. These instan- ces prove that there is danger in hyp- notism apart from, the muscular strain imposed on subjects .by pin- headed professors, such as in - the Somerville, Seance. As a Defence for brim. Some years ago,' in thb . days of "Trilby,: when thousands of mesmer- ists and hypnotists Were touring the country giving exhibitione, when Shaftesbury Hall .was the scene of nightly. sensations, the plea of sug- gestion as a defence in criminal, Cases *as very common. It. was letroubt- edly abused almost as much as is the insanity' defence of today,. There have been cases, however,' in which crimin- als abused. their knowledge of hynot- ism to aid their nefarious. plans ; and as.'far back as 1365 a tramp . was tried and convicted in a •. Euro- pean court for hyrinotising. a, woman and then abusing hoe In 1591 an Austrian, adventurer waS • sent to pris- on for . three years fer haying hypnot- ised a baroness into a paeudo• mar- riage. 'Dr, VOlson reports the case of a ewoman who was hytmotised and us- ed .as the tool of extenstre thievery by three swindlers. The Moral Sense Quickened. . In rather curioue. oppoeitioe to gen- eralizationa that might be made froin these cases .is the claim by seme sci- eittists that hypnotism. does etot, de- moralize the subject.: On the cone thee moral Sense in isomer than: in normal circumstances. Liebault, a niember of the • Nancy •Scheol of In- vestigatore, foetid that. only .4 or 5 per cent. of his subjects 'were .amen - b1 I. to criminal euggestions. Some I of his patients carried out the crimin- ' al • suggestion bega.use they, evidently the cauliflowers have room' to epread, • realized that the deeds were not bona fide. "Many girn subjects," says a welter in the New York Tribune; fuse to follow indelicatt• or impolite suggestions, even showing a moral squeamishness not of their waking state." A physician hypnotised a girl suffering from lungstrouble, and was surprised at her refusal to. let him examine her chest. Oa being re- minded that he had often made this examination, she replied, "You; never 'before did it when I wast asleep." As a rule subjects dornot remember what, happens in their trances until. they are again hypnotized. Not Absolute Power. , An illustration of the theory that hypnotism is never absolute! .arici that the patient always retains some faint glimmering of rational conduct; is .siimilied by I3ernheim, a• noted in- vestigator. One of bis subjects' was a girl who appeared to be absolutely in his power. Yet he could never per- suade or successfully command her to -empty tv bottle of ink on her dress. An American subjec:t cheerfully obey- ed the command. of the hypnotist to stab •him with. a cardboard knife ; but when a real pen -knife' was placed in her hand and she was told torepeat the net she ,hesitated and had an at- tack of hysterics. The truth seems tet be that hypnotism has not been reduced tp the exact sciences, and that there are years, perhapseeenera- tons -of research work to be donts fore before we know as much abouteit as we do about, electricity, ior • in- stance. • • An Early Fallacy.: Pioneer mesmerists suPposede that their subjects werc. acted on by rats emanating from bright lights, cryStal „balls and:so forth. Then- Braid dis- covered that the subjects really, 'aeted . on. themselves. He ep'roved this' s. at' the expense of a London- demonstratdr wile was peoducing .wonderful catalepe sips "by means Of a poiverful _magnet. Braid cleiined that . he hada. still more powerful magnet and effected equal- results with a parse and *eye ting. Although a professor named 'Brodie :was hooted off a Glasgow stage the other day becease. of his fake ."cures," there can be no doubt that certain disorders can be cured by hypnotic. -suggestion. The • intesinal' muscles . and the . sweat glands, for. instant;e, are.. readily controlled „by means of suggestion.. The 'fact that, wisely' applied, hypnotism is capab:e: of much gobd. is snail a 'elein invita- tion to the incompetent* and the dis- honest that- the "praetipe. of the art • eliould be more strictly supervised :by the authorities.' . ' • . (i: werate..exmliarreat• damma.miumm with a Melon vine or a cucumber in r -'-not- i4 and east winds. Or else the gar- the middle •to , riot Over the whole den has its own walls, eight to fif- three by four feet inclosed when the teen feet high on the north and east cauliflower . heads are set .out again sicres, giving a climate of its own. in the open field. ' • Canada Takes to the Water. The Government of the Dominion 'has decided, subjtet to the approsal of Parliament, to give orders for the.. -construction of three cruisersof the! Bristol class, costing $1,900,000 each - and four destroyers, costing $1.00,00 each, as a nucleus of Canada's naval force. The'number of officers men required for these vis4els will be 1,408, andthe pay roll and victf ualling will cost about $500,000 a -year. The total cost el the naval - force is estimated .. at $2,000,000 a year. This willinclude the .nainten- alive of efficient dockyarns at Halifax and Esquimalt, which will be avail- able for the largest ship of the Itoyai * NaVy. The Bristols are .the most 1 ecent type of scout adopted by 'he Admir- site: They displace 4,800 toes,. and have aespeed of. 25 knots an • hour, to provide. which ,turbine. (ngint s dev- elop 22,000 horsepoWer. • They are arnied With two . six-inch and. ten - four -inch quick -firers,' as well • as smaller weapons:. . , • ' - The destroyers are small ..ani very speedy' craft, intended to War against torpedo boats. They al.tO carry tor- Pedos, to be used il, opportunity o sere yes' in attacking larger craft. " Of scouts similar to 'the .13ristols, • Gettrianyhas but eight at the Pres- ent time, while Britain has • twenty- one of 25-knOt speed In edlitioe .tn. scouting, these ships would. be usetal in ,time of -War for the p•roteetioe of oeean trade foutcs. '• The Good Roads Policu. The Ontario Legislature's interest ! in the promotion of roadway im- provements is by no means, exhausted. Though that interist was of late -growth it ie extremely healthy and can be depended upon- to go on de- veloping asState interest has devel- oped in other lines. Once having got I well into the genial atmosphere of legislative care the good roads busin- ess should thrive there as well as, say, the educational affairs of the prov- ince or the numerous matters of pub- lic concern that pertain to the prov- ince's Department of Agriculture. Legislat ion in regard to the two ]al ter classes of subjects never re- mains ata standstill. It ia always progressive. We may sat oly take it for granted that the _ enactments re- lating to the improvement of the roads will he of like progressive char- acter. There is no reason to expel that ,laws for the bettering of the roads will be the result of inspira- tion showing us the allele perfect way in a flash. What should be the nextstep in the muse (-1 roadway.. legislation ? That the time has mine for taking another step scents eLar. Under the Act providing f the granting of provinsial as.sistance itt 1 his building of count y roads, the ad- vance made from the . zero state of the, highways has been far 1 rom. Some countir s have e inforrd to the eonditions and have made great chtim• ges for the better in the intent arter- ies of their public trafte. Theve im- provements have no doufit had a good effect as examples to neighboring, counties. To alt rile! e CIII1SP or caus- es, it is 10 he a tribu t ed to the fact that there has twee an awakening of public interest for .better roads is now working in the province and producing a public pinion, the people are not yet so wrought up on the questinn as to be prepared Wept, in � few counties, tito pay twnethhhis of the.enst.• It lecke as if the Legislature would have to meet the emetics quite half way. If the proportion the province is hu- . thorized to Pay were increased to e0 Per cent., there would be much • lese reluctance on the part of the counties. to do their diMinished sharo. The first, thiag is to get:the:highways eery greatly improved for purposes of traffic, ' When that economic' °Wet, is well forwardedother ends, canethcii be provided for by legislation as it seems to be requircde , The attractivtriese of the roads is of course secondary to their useful- ness, but It is a certainty that what- eyer adds to the pleasantmss of dhe highways reacts beneficially upon to private lands and homesteads " aet.t.t- ing •the roads. In New York State every farmer who maintains a public watering. Yrough opposite his pemis s receives ri hount y or $3al. SO ir taerte for: The farmers receiae• $1 a year for ,every three trees• they place along the. highway. A well 4,1toupht o' t, but liberal good roads peliey would add greatly tocthe prosperity, hap i - ess and dignity Of country life. --Mail and Empire. • mime. • Promptitude. XXXXXXX XX X XX XXXXXXXX X IS TILLS Fort YOU ? •X ° ...X X We have oft our lista number- G X or eubscribets ' who are a year .X X and .some .more .than a year in X X arrears for their subscription X. X to The News -Record. In Many X cases . it is but anoversight. .X To the individual • subscriber .X .X the amount is small but when X X take in the aggregate' aniounts X X to a _considerable, sum , of . X •X • Money we etiiild 'use to adieu- X X tage at the:present time.' We X X ;would therefore ask our Sube X X scrilices to lOok at the label on X X their papers and if they are .X X mitmarked up we would. be X X pleased to hav'e their remit- X X tanee at the earliest Possible X. X.. moment. 13y giving. this your: X X attention you will confer, a : . X favor on us. • , ° . X X • : . , XXXXXXX XX X 'XX XXXXXXXX Mare promptitude in the. every. day • things of life is a 'quality . Which...is Much needed in the. present day: • No matter where, you tarn, you will .find the Man Who is always a little late. He gets up a few minutes late in the Morning, arrives a little late at the office, and on throughout the whole day lie is unable to .catch hp and is. therefore always lagging behiad. ' It is 'a thingas things go and yet. it oftentimes .means a -great, , deal. What is mere aggravating tothe man who is always on time than to have to wait on such 0,..straggler ? • Dope • it not' seem strange, that. . ia- order. to get a .quorani at most of the ineetingethese days, the hour has to be set at.7.30 if the .receting is actual- lyto cOmmenee at 8 .o'eloek ? It is a Sad state of. affairs and yet it is the ea5t.' • . • The num:len:presents itself,. is 11 whic lO Pander.,IO this growing "evil ? -Would it not be better to set. the hour at eight; o'clock and commence promptly • on 'time ? . . • Is it net 'tittle to reverse the order of things ? Why not, during the cOrning: days call the meetings at the moat sffissirable tinie anti '• commetice promptly? • • •, • . Repeat .it :-"Shileh's Cure will al- ays cure my coughs ead colds." • , An Ithportant Ad- . dress by Sir Wit-, ' Repeat it :-"Shiloh's Cure will al- . ' • • trxd Laurer. . wive cure my coughs and colds." • Sir. Wilfrid Laurier's recent ' speech . • A Great Incinstrg. The product of the canning and jam factories of Ontario, iii • fruit, alone, May .be Safely' placed at $3,500,000 a year. Tender fruits disposed of in the raw state will account for at least • one and one-half millions more.. The apple output :of the Province --count- ing in that consumed on the farm, the portion sold: in the raw, and the ev- Eng OperatilcnS ° Potato ,Culteare Fkur. on TOwnship, If the, weallur good, Mr. Dew - son will have his potatoes :anted this week in the ,sandattle. foot 'of the hill 0)1 his fa rot. Ile had over 25 acres ander pot atoi s. lie has • every bort ef machinery for large opera- tions in potato eulture-a planter, a w poer sprayer, a potato cultivator, a seed". c.utter and a diga•er... 1 le ^ also Iia ti picker in enhnekion with his, dige ger, but it bruled the eoladoes so, removud it mid eneaged a staff of yoeng lads trade that work, He will have pi•obality "fiVe thousand bUshvis of firet-class Initiators, different al)- provrd varittiA, and exinets to it"l them tit MO11 bushel.--Rincardine TWO (W. aporated product -is worth not lcsg than $7,000,000: Here is a total out- put of $11,000,000 a year aside from three to three and ontehalf inilltoim reprtsentine the, vegetable pan% of.th6 atlelles enagt: Hot tannins. 'The fruit industry, is as wideseread as any other bt•aneh of Provieelal ag- riculture. It' eovers not only • the Niagara dist rice, • but 1 he north shore of Lake Ontario, a large 'part of the Erie shore, the Iluvon tract, and the Georgian Bay The industry is 11 great emploYer, of labor, and lab- or of a kind Allot won1,1 otherwise be largely unoneiloyed-wemen and ehil- drill...in smaller (owes and villageg. It is ,n benefitiai itelnetry ; there are ' I • 1 ti • e -ef . • . . TA) t • .poverty Ibati whet e fruit itt largely grown -arid there Is no artielead table • !Ill' W1iiC11 vouteibutes more to... the phYsical well-being •cif the 'People than on "I'lite Constitutions of Great Brit- ain arid the United 'States -a Compar- !ism)," given before the Woma,n'os-Caffe' ; aclian Club of Montreal, Was an' lie - Portant one . and one which " teachers and leaders of debating- societies Will fled exceedinglyvaluable for •readings and for discussion. . • ' !. That it was ae instructive .address. goes without saying., for natters of constitutional ,history . form .otic of , the, favorite studies of the Premier., Ile was enthusiastically applauded, when lie cles,lared that the 13ritish Constitution was the pride of all British subjects: .1Ie showed how all Other countries. in the search foe liberty' had had to adopt the princip- le's 'of' that constitution in whole or in part, and remarked that the anost illustrious; example of all was that of . the American Colonies, which, When 1.1 d'.. •wrehehed thttmselvett front the Metherland, and Paid lime the compliment of adopting her con- stitution as far asthe new conditions permitted. He showed why, in ,his opinion, the. British Constitution, Was. more elastic and more' responsive to the public needs than the American • Constitution. •- - WATER GAUGE BURST. Firemao Oadly Scalded. C.P.R. fireman, Geo. Duffus, who livee ha Roberteon Street, Fort William, while oo his engine near ‘Vestford happened a nasty accident. The water eauge of the locomotive burst and scalded the whole of the left side of his face and head terribly. "It sobappenedir said Dulles to our repre. sentative, " that I had a box ot ZarieBuk in my pocket, which I used for a sore on my lip, and when I had recovered from tbe first sliock of the accident, I produced the balm and bad it applied freely to the sca.lcied parts, At the time 1 applied it was tuflering.acute agony, but within a wonderfully short tune Zam-I3uk gave me ease. I was able to continue my journey, and upon reaching home I obtained, more Zanokluk and continued the treatment. It acted woudertuily well, and in a few days had the wound nicely healing. 1 diet know anything so line as a healer 01 burns, scalds, cuts, and eimil te injures which workers are so liable to; and in my opinion a box of Um -Bilk should tie kept handy n every worker's home." There is something different and superior about Zane auk. Thn s and again workers in all branches of trade have proved ite vast superiority over the advertised ointments and salves of the day. No doubt the fact that Zern•Bult is made entirely from herbal essences and extracts, while ordinary oint- ments contain more or less animal fats and oils, gees a long way to explain Z on-Buk's superiority.. However this may be, the fact remains that in four continents to which it has been introduced within ten years it has be- come the leading household balm! For burns, cuts, scalds, bruises, eczema, piles, ulcers, ring -worm, itch, salt -rheum, bad leg, festering sores, chapped .places, cold -sores, frost -bites, and all skin injuries and diseases, Zant-liuk is beyond doubt a most tnarvellous cure. .• Druggists and stores sell at 50 cents a box and the Zarn.Buk Co., Toronto, will mail tt box,, post free, upon receipt of price, to any of our readers who may have diffieuhy itt obtaining a supply ot the genuine Zs m-Buk from their local stores. is the as with fruit. • fiats oft to the men .of the orchard and' the vine --Weekly Sun. In Plans are on foot to hold an exhi- bition in 1913 to Celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of. the freedom of the .ne- gro nice ite. America, : • • . • e • Repea't it e--"Shiloh's Cure will al- ways care my coughs and eollv." The Pere Marquette Railway Came; pany has notified the .City of London that it will not ask- for a renewal .of the lease .of the • London and Port Stanley road. • , . iThrough the courteey of Sir Wil- frid Laurier, the full text of tide 'ad - address has been published in World , Widy of November .60, copies of which may be obtained at special' rates from the publishers, John Dou- gall & Son, ,Montreal, Quebec. 1 I HOW AULT, A VOLD- A Mile McLaughlin was arrested at • . 'TO :xbridge and taken to Whitby jail on • No easier or more pleasant than to a charge of murdering his %-vife. inhale "Calarrintione"---it swag the told instantly, •clears the nnstrils and Repeat it :--j1Shiloli's -Cure ^Will cuts ont the phlegm, Try Catarrho- Ways -cure -my cought and C zone yourself. o s" .1 Established 1879 FOR 191.10012114G COUGH, CROUP, ASTHMA, COUGHS, BRONCHITIS, SOR::: THROAT, CATARRH. DIPEITHERLA Vaporized .Cresolene stops the paroxysres of Whoop.ing Cough. Ever dreaded Croup can- not exist where Cresolene is used. It acts directlyon nose and tltroat mtkinC breathing easy in the case et colds, tito•thes he sore throat and stoop the cough.Iis a boon to sllerers ofAsthma. • Cresoleneia n powerful germicide, acting both S$ a curative and a proventive in contagious diseases. Cresolenes best recommendation is its thirty years of SuCCC3Slal tt3C. : • ror sato by 4.11 Draaillts Send'Postal for De- scriptive Booklet Cresoleno Antiseptic Throat Tablets, simple and soothing for the irritated throat, lee. Leeming. Miles Co, Limited, Monts, Mon- treal. Caciada. so8 • in a speech at Mancliested... Mr. As„. tinut 'J. Balfour declared that tariff i-eforin was the only practical altein.- ative to the, present budget: The -House of Lords passed the Iri.,11 land bill, alterieg certain emend - 'merits which the Commons had declion ed to accept. ' ••• IJBEE LIST [OH irigg-10 Much good reading for little nagney. . . • Witeiletave • .. News -Record and Mall and e • Eatipire.. - . ... . $1.50 News-Reeord and Globe 1.75. - News-13eeord and. Family Herald and Star vit1i 8. News -Record and 'Witness 1.75 News-Reeord and Sun 1.75 News-Reeord and Free • 1.75 Pipes News -Record and:. • Ad.001.... • . . . • .... • 1.75 News -Record and Toronto Saturday Night • 2.30 Neeeadapeord and. Vaulter's; . • Advocate 2.25. .News-Ilecord. and Earn' 1:15 • e and 'Dairy Newsellecord and Cana - 1 dian Farm DaireErt 1.75 News -Record and Mail and 4.25 Empire • News-Ilecord and (Iolbe.... 4.25 Newk-Itbeotel and News 2.30 News -Record and Star . , 11.30 News -Record and World 3.25 News-130(4nd and Morning PCP,P4 News -Record and Evenieg • View Press 2//5 ,News-Reeprti. and Adver- tise!, 3.00 M (*minty News-Ileeord and- TAPPin- •COtt's- Magizine '3 25 iffesissoll If what you want is not in this list let us know about it. We can supply you at less than it Woithd eost vo0. to send direct. In remitting please do so by Post-offlee Order, Postal Note, ExpresS Order or Registered Letter and address. W. J. Mitchell News0Record 0 CLINTON "6"-----1 I oney Saving I Sale or ne onth .•••• , It Commenced Nov. 1st and will Continue Right Through this Month. RANGES REDUCTION FOR CASH FOR MONTH OF NOVEMBER Happy Thought Range sqtlare * $3.00 with reservoir 3.00 with reservoir and high, shelf • 3.00 916 Pandora and reservoir 3.00 restrvoir and high shelf 918. • "..• .1, 2.00 and yeservoir, ?.op reservoir and high shelf 3,00 Model Huron' 2.00 Kitchen Range and Reservoir • • ' COAL HEATERS 2.00 No. 5 Radiant Home . 2.00 " with oven • 2.00 -- No. 113 McClary's Famous 300 No. 114 . .." .. 3.00 . Fairy' with oven 2.00 and 5 per cent. discount °Rail small Coallleaters HARDWARE Bell faced Steell-Iammers reg. 75c for 40c Wrenches 50c for 38c . Fire Shovels . 5c and 10c 3 -ft English. Rules . ' 30c --Handled Axes • 750 A'fine quality. Shaving brush •. 25c Razor StrOpS, good •... 25c . Special prices. on .Razors °lass Cutters .10c See the new Self-'wyinging Mops only. 75c Lanterns, large burners 60p A good Storm Door complete with fittings $1.50 GRAINTITEWARE Just received a large assortinent one=third off the regular price. • 84c 66c 20e 53c 20c 23c 27c 33c for $1,00 84e $1.25 Double Cookers for 1.00 ."' 30c Wash•Bowls for 80c -Water Pails tor 30c Tea Sleepers for 35c Chambers for 40c $1.50 Preserving Kettles 1.25' " 1.00 " .75 .60 ". .30 Dippers for 66c 50e 40c 20c DUSTBANE Why You Should Use Dustbane It saves labox in sweeping., It saves one half your dusting, . It saves your carpets and rugs. „ It saves yonr health. . It is sanitary ,as it contains an anteseptic fluid which kills gernr4. The evaporation of this fluid While 'sweeping thoroughly disinfects the room. Try it once and you Will continually use it. List of Second4land 'Heaters in aood Repair °1 Acme Coal Heater $10 .1 Expo t Coal Heater $8 1, Radiant Rome with oven $18 Princess Acorn $14 1 Imperial Jewell $15 . 1 Vesta Pearl $7 °. ' 1 MeClary 13011 e $4 1 Parlor Cook for wood goi 2 'Box Stoves for wood $2 Minor Bright wood coolt $15 Try Wyandotte Cleaner and Cleanser- a full . 5 lb. Bag for '5c. The Cheapest and best Cleansing Compound in Use.. Fla.tlatid Bros. syoves AND ,HARDWARE CLINTON- 81